Sure, paper is still everywhere: there’s no shortage of newspapers, notepads, receipts, books, and merchandise catalogs–most of it destined for recycling plants or landfills. Recognizing this, the crux of my argument focused on the explosion of paper-impacting “e” devices, consumer trends, and sustainability as factors that will collectively work to reduce paper consumption.

Here are some of my key points made during the live rebuttal which took place on Tuesday:

There exists a seduction to remove paper from the fields of business, law, academia and medicine. Even those who say we’re far from a paperless society still wish we weren’t. Dawson and most commentators from the floor agreed that moving toward a paperless society is desirable.

With the market saturated with decent printers under $100 and pretty much everyone using electronic devices connected to printers, the temptation to print is high because that’s the way we’ve been conditioned. As our moderator Larry Dignan pointed out, the pieces are in place to go paperless, but the cultural hurdles are still too high.

E-writers like the Boogie Board writing tablet could put an end to note books, legal pads, sketch books, memo pads, sticky notes, and scratch paper. As they improve in cost and performance, e-writers could be the next hot tech gadget to enter the mainstream. This could be the killer app since paper is not just used for reading, but for writing on too.

If more people better understood the true costs of paper production they’d become more mindful of paper use. The paper industry emits the fourth highest level of carbon dioxide among manufacturers. If sustainability means anything to you, then this argument could pass muster. If, however, you believe that holding paper “just feels right” no matter what, then we’ll just have to wait for the day you hold in your hands a sheet of millimeter-thick, high-res, full-color interactive e-paper before you snap out of it!

Alas, despite the supporting evidence I presented, I was not victorious in the debate. Yes, we are still awash in paper. With the audience siding on the “not there yet” camp and no way to conceal the fact that the world still uses hundreds of millions of tons of paper annually, my closing arguments had to become forward-looking statements:

Future generations will look back in amazement by the paper production process and the waste it generates. Like burning fossil fuels for energy, cutting down trees to create books and documents will be frowned upon by society and the practice will fall by the wayside.